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        Deprecated Microsoft Tools To Be Included in SharePoint 2016
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- May 13, 2015
Microsoft's forthcoming SharePoint Server 2016 product will include several deprecated technologies when it becomes generally available next year.
SharePoint 2016 will arrive with InfoPath 2013, Microsoft's deprecated forms creation technology, as well as require Windows Server AppFabric 1.1, which also is being  deprecated. 
Per Microsoft's definition, "deprecated"  does not necessarily mean   that the software is "dead." The product can continue to work. However, Microsoft won't perform any further development work on it.
AppFabric for SharePoint 2016
Microsoft's Windows Server AppFabric 1.1 product will lose product  support on April 2, 2016. That period is near the same time that Microsoft  plans to release SharePoint Server 2016 commercially. Microsoft confirmed at its  Ignite conference for IT pros last week that SharePoint Server 2016 will get a "general  availability" release in Q2 2016.
Even though AppFabric is becoming "unsupported software"  next year, which also means that it will go unpatched, it will still be  supported in SharePoint Server 2016, according to a  comment made by Bill Baer, senior technical product manager and Microsoft  Certified Master for SharePoint, during an Ignite session. The paradox wasn't  explained.
Update: In a May 13 "Yam Jam" Q&A session, Baer offered this explanation:
  Our partner team that develops AppFabric is committed to continued support of AppFabric embedded in server products such as SharePoint, as such AppFabric remains supported with SharePoint 2013 and SharePoint 2016 thru their respective lifecycles. This announcement is specific to standalone AppFabric scenarios.
While AppFabric is maybe a somewhat obscure piece of  middleware, the scheduled demise of InfoPath has greater implications for IT  shops. Some organizations may have standardized on it or built some company  resources using it. 
Microsoft has largely stayed mum about its InfoPath plans,  except for a  January blog post, updated in February. The update clarified that InfoPath  2013 will be the last supported product of its kind, with an "extended  support" end date of April  11, 2023. The Forms on SharePoint Lists product was described as being "cancelled."  InfoPath Forms Services, on the other  hand, will be included in SharePoint Server 2016 and will be fully supported.
Organizations  looking for further guidance about InfoPath's future at  Ignite   apparently did not get it. Microsoft SharePoint MVP Laura Rogers  noted in a  Tweet that Microsoft mostly did not mention InfoPath at Ignite, although  it was mentioned in a session called, "Proven Ways  to Build Robust, No-Code Solutions in Microsoft SharePoint,"  conducted by Microsoft SharePoint MVPs Jennifer Mason and Asif Rehmani. 
InfoPath  Alternatives
Mason and Rehmani's  session outlined alternative ways to build SharePoint solutions without coding.  They outlined some methods using the following solutions: 
  
     [Click on image for larger view.]	
		Microsoft forms update. (Source: Ignite 2015 session.)
    
	
		[Click on image for larger view.]	
		Microsoft forms update. (Source: Ignite 2015 session.)
  
The session had  lots of good examples, but Mason and Rehmani stopped short of explaining  InfoPath's future. It seems from past Microsoft statements that the company is  working on ways to use Access and Word for building forms in the next SharePoint,  although maybe it's not fully baked. 
Rehmani said that  "Access is making a comeback in a huge way," which may have been a  clue of sorts about Microsoft's forms direction. Rehmani explained that Access web apps for 2013 in its current form is a subset of what InfoPath 2013 could do.  Access can be used as a  means of simplifying Web development, and it's interactive with SharePoint 2013  or Office 365 services, he explained.
Microsoft's current  advice is for organizations to continue to use InfoPath if they are now using  it. However, if an organization is starting from scratch, then they should not  use InfoPath. Possibly, they should seek the use of third-party solutions, Rehmani  explained.
There are various third-party  solution alternatives to InfoPath out there. Examples include Ardevia Rich Forms, Formotus, Forms 7 on CodePlex, Infowise Ultimate Forms, K2 SmartForms, Kaldeera  Forms, KWizCom Forms, PDF Share Forms, Nintex Forms, SharePoint Forms Designer and Qdabra FormsQuo.
A blog  post by Formotus provided additional warning info for InfoPath users experimenting  with the Office 2016 preview, which was initially released  in March but more broadly released  this month. The Office 2016 preview will uninstall InfoPath 2013, according  to Formotus' post. Microsoft describes this behavior as a known  issue, and it's "by design":
  After installing the Office 2016  Preview, you may notice that InfoPath Designer 2013 has been removed from your  list of Office applications.  This is by design, Microsoft is will no  longer be shipping new versions of InfoPath.
PerformancePoint  Lives On
Microsoft's messages  regarding InfoPath and AppFabric seem to be somewhat mixed, at least when it  comes to their future in SharePoint Server 2016. Meanwhile, Microsoft SharePoint  MVP John White noticed that PerformancePoint Services will be getting a new  lease on life of sorts. He cited a comment made by Baer at Ignite indicating that PerformancePoint  Services will be back ported into SharePoint 2016.
White expressed  some skepticism, though, saying that "in terms of new features, I believe  that PerformancePoint, much like InfoPath is a dead end." 
Microsoft's lifecycle  product support page just lists PerformancePoint  Services in SharePoint Server 2010, with extended support ending in October  2020. Microsoft does have PerformancePoint  Services for SharePoint Server 2013, but the lifecycle support apparently isn't  listed.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.